What You Need To Know
Sinclair picks up a month after the events of Baelor, pulling the reader into Medusa’s Cove, where new faces emerge, and familiar ones return in unfamiliar light. In the same way Christianity and decay swell across each page in Baelor, a unique culture inspired by Greek mythology paints the atmosphere in Sinclair. In Baelor, rot was the story. In Sinclair, rot hides beneath perfume where it's sweet until you breathe too deeply. Though very similar to its predecessor, wealth brings corruption, and with corruption comes the ultimate downfall of a family built on secrets and blood money.
The ghost of Baelor still haunts the narrative—mold never fully lets go—but Sinclair changes the stage.
In its simplicity, Baelor is post-collapse, while Sinclair is pre-collapse; however, the story still progresses, entering a more volatile stage.
Meet Sophia Sinclair
She honors her mother and her gods; she is Medusian in blood and in spirit, gentle at times, wild at others, beautiful always.
Meet Henry Kingswell
He'll give you the gun and convince you it was your idea to pull the trigger.
Meet Anthony Vanderlace
He serves no god, only himself. He is precise, cruel, brilliant, and in the silence between his words, a ravenous monster awaits.